Abstract

BackgroundFerns, being vascular yet seedless, present unparalleled opportunities to investigate important questions regarding the evolution and development of land plants. Ceratopteris richardii, a diploid, homosporous fern has been advanced as a model fern system; however, the tenuous ability to transform the genome of this fern greatly limited its usefulness as a model organism. Here we report a simple and reliable Agrobacterium-mediated method for generating transient and stable transformants of mature C. richardii gametophytes.ResultsTransformation success was achieved by enzyme treatment that partially digested the cell walls of mature gametophytes to facilitate Agrobacteria infection. Co-incubation of Agrobacteria with enzymatically treated gametophytes was sufficient to generate transient transformants at a frequency of nearly 90% under optimal conditions. Stable transformation was achieved at a rate of nearly 3% by regenerating entire gametophytes from single transformed cells from T0 gametophytes on selective media.ConclusionsThis transformation method will allow for the immediate observation of phenotypes in the haploid gametophytes of transformed plants, as well as the generation of stably transformed C. richardii lines for further analysis. Transformation capability will greatly facilitate gene functional studies in C. richardii, more fully realizing the potential of this model fern species. These protocols may be adapted to other plant species that are recalcitrant to Agrobacterium-mediated transformation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13104-015-1193-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Ferns, being vascular yet seedless, present unparalleled opportunities to investigate important ques‐ tions regarding the evolution and development of land plants

  • Partial digestion of the cell wall is critical for Agrobacterium‐mediated transient transformation of C. richardii We found that the success of an Agrobacterium-transformation protocol depends on the choice of tissues for Agrobacteria infection

  • Only a single layer of cells, and readily regenerated and propagated on aseptic culture media, the gametophyte presented the ideal choice for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation

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Summary

Introduction

Ferns, being vascular yet seedless, present unparalleled opportunities to investigate important ques‐ tions regarding the evolution and development of land plants. Despite the abundance of fern species and the unique opportunity they offer for investigating the evolution of seeds and vascular systems, arguably the two most important events contributing to land plant expansion, ferns are among the most underinvestigated land plant clades. C. richardii lacks a woody rhizome (comparable to the stem in angiosperms) and grows as an annual plant [2]. It has a relatively short life cycle of 120 days from spore to spore under optimum growth conditions and the ability to produce a vast amount of spores [2, 6].

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